Please rotate your device

Poisonous Fillings

Facebook

Twitter

Google+

25/05/1840

Information

Monsieur J.M. Mallan, a surgeon-dentist from London's Ludgate Hill, 'begs to inform the nobility, gentry and inhabitants of this town and their vicinities that he may be consulted on Mondays at Mrs Swift's, Market Place'. He offers the following:
"...to fill the cavities of decayed teeth, however large, with Mineral Saccedaneum, the great advantage of which is that it is placed in the tooth in an almost liquid state, without heat or pressure, and immediately hardens into an enamel which by a recent improvement will not discolour. it allays pain, arrests further progress of decay, thus preventing the necessity of extraction. By this means, a mere shell is converted into a sound and useful tooth, and the unpleasant taint of the breath arising from it entirely removed."
What he doesn't say is that 'Mineral Saccedaneum' is almost pure mercury and is most definitely not a nice thing to have in your mouth! (Lincoln, Rutland and Stamford Mercury)
Taken from The Peterborough Book of Days by Brian Jones, The History Press, 2014.

Search and filter

Time periods

Anglo-saxon

Geological

Georgian

Jurassic

Medieval

Norman

Prehistoric

Romans

Stuarts

Tudors

Twentieth Century

Twenty First Century

Victorian

Themes

Arts

Celebration

Commerce

Crime

Cultures

Death

Education

Environment

Immigration

Industry

Landscape

Medicine

Military

Music

Myths & Legends

Politics

Recreation

Religion

Science

Sport

The Natural World

Transport

War

Significant Events

Celebrations

Coronations

Economic

Geographical

Politics

Scientific

Social

Transport

War

People

Activists

Aristocracy

Artists

Criminals

Industrialists

Military

Monarchs

Performers

Religious

Revolutionaries

Scholars

Scientists

Sportspeople

Buildings

Academic

Cultural

Industrial

Landmarks

Medical

Municiple

Parks

Places of Worship

Recreational

Trade

Transport

Commerce

Objects

Archaeology

Art

Costume

Geology

Natural History

Records

Social History

Treasure

Decades

1900s

1910s

1920s

1930s

1940s

1950s

1960s

1970s

1980s

1990s

2000s

2010s

Curriculum Subjects

Art

Citizenship

Design and Technology

Drama

English

Geography

History

Information Technology

Mathematics

Modern Foreign Languages

Music

Physical Education

Religious Education

Science

Places

Barnack

Bretton

Castor

Central

Dogsth

Dogsthorpe

East

Eye

Fletton

Glinton

Gunthorpe

Hampton Hargate

Hampton Vale

Helpston

Longthorpe

Nene Park

Newborough

North

Orton Longueville

Orton Waterville

Park

Paston

Ravensthorpe

Stanground

Thorney

Walton

Werrington

West

Whittlesey

Wittering

Woodston

Locality

Local

Global

National

ARPs

Facebook

Twitter

Google+

17/11/1939

Information

It was in September 1935 that the British prime minister, Stanley Baldwin, published a circular entitled Air Raid Precautions (ARPs), inviting local authorities to make plans to protect their people in event of a war. Although notorious for so often being last to do things, Peterborough appears to have been on the ball here and began to implement ARP soon after the outbreak of the conflict. It was on this day that the London Brick Co. at Fletton stated that all of its precautions were completed and, in all the works at Fletton, some form of protection was available. A number of old tunnels with 15ft to 20ft of earth above them had been turned into shelters with 'baffle walls' at the ends to make them safe from blasts and flying debris. Where there were no convenient tunnels they had built brick-lined trenches, covered them with sheets of corrugated iron and then piled quite a few feet of earth on top. All protective places had seating, a water supply, toilet facilities and emergency lighting. At the museum in Priestgate, the old cellars - dating back to the sixteenth century - were brought into use as very effective air-raid shelters. (Grey, David, Peterborough at War 1939-1945, David Grey, 2011)

Taken from The Peterborough Book of Days by Brian Jones, The History Press, 2014.

Discover, understand, and enjoy the rich and diverse stories which make the city of Peterborough what it is today.